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Authority record

Operation Dismantle (Kingston Branch)

  • CA QUA02587
  • Corporate body
  • 1977-1989

Operation Dismantle, founded in 1977 by T. James Stark and Peter Brown, was a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization whose goal was to bring the pressure of international public opinion to bear on national governments to negotiate an end to the nuclear arms race. Subsequent to its founding, branches were set up all over Canada, including Kingston, Ontario, in 1983. It Canadian headquarters was located in Ottawa. A principal project has been a UN-sponsored world referendum on disarmament, which the organization believed would be the best way to provide governments with a sufficiently powerful mandate. Dismantle had some 10,000 members and supporters; funding was provided by donations and membership fees. Operation Dismantle in Canada pioneered the idea of municipal referenda on disarmament; the campaign led to 195 votes in municipal campaigns, with the results 76.2% in favour. In 1983, it led a coalition to stop the testing of the Cruise missile over Canadian territory. In 1985 the case went to the Supreme Court, which ruled that Operation Dismantle had insufficient grounds, under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to argue in court the merits of an injunction on Cruise missile testing. The organization led a campaign during the 1984 federal election to make a nuclear freeze an election issue. The organization was disbanded in 1989.

Open Road

  • CA QUA08529
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Open Learning Institute

  • CA QUA09024
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Oolichan Books

  • CA QUA09495
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

No information available on this creator.

Ontario Young Manhood Associaton

  • CA QUA01677
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

Ontario Young Manhood Associaton was devoted to fostering sobriety and advocating prohibition in Ontario.

Ontario Women's Institute (Pittsburgh, Ont.)

  • CA QUA01922
  • Corporate body
  • n.d.

The Pittsburgh Women's Institute was organized on the 24th of April 1924 . The organizational meeting was held at the home of Mrs. James English of Middle Road and the Departmental organizer was Mrs. Sirrett. Miss Crozier was the first President with Mrs. Colin Rogers serving as Secretary-Treasurer. One early major project was the purchase of a Hall, on Middle Road (formerly a Methodist church) which was sold in 1931. The main tenets of the Institute were to provide community help and leadership through a “non-partisan, non-sectarian and non-racial organization” of regional rural women. The Institute held many events raising funds for various local and international projects.
In the 1940s the Pittsburgh Branch established a relationship with the Oulton Women’s Institute of Norwich, England sending many parcels of food and clothing during, and after, the 2nd World War. It was a relationship that continued into the 1990s.
In addition to sponsoring and giving financial support to a variety of local groups the Institute also fostered many crafting opportunities (such as quilting) for its members. The members of the Pittsburgh branch donated tapestries to both the City of Kingston and the Pittsburgh Township office.
The Pittsburgh Women’s Institute ceased existing as a branch in, or around, 2010.

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